Wednesday 9 February 2011

A day in Nicaragua

In the morning, mosquitos; slow and heavy with my blood.

Dusty the yellow, sun lit shafts, and thin; small light cracks around a heavy door.

In the morning, one half-opened eye, a £2 bottle of rum, half-empty, and a concrete floor, scattered mess and a bike to ride.

In the morning, revenge; red, mosquito-sized blotches on hot, wet skin. The scrunching of them. The tearing of wings.

Cold, waking water in the morning´s heat.



Later, under the midday sun, a horse lies, dead. On one side, smooth, bare ribs stick out towards the sky, the shrivelled black heads of vultures jostling for meat. Wings flare up and two pairs of talons grapple and scratch. There is half a horse left, but already, reason to fight. The horse´s head turns away, nonchalant, as though uninterested by the score of vultures feasting on its flesh. Or perhaps its neck is broken.

Behind the vultures green grass glistens, wet, and in the distance the faded silhouette of a volcano, a smoky dark blue. I stop for lunch at a wooden shack, a single stove connected to a gas canister. Chicken, rice and beans.



The fields dissolve into the dust and noise of a city; the market places and three-lane streets, new glass buildings and shining cars. A public park is covered in make-shift shelters; corrugated iron sheets, branches of trees and black plastic bags stretched taut. The structures are packed so tightly, there is barely enough room for a person to walk between them. There are no doors built into the shelters, but inhabitants of the settlement come and go, through the gaps in plastic-bag walls.

I cycle through Managua, the capital city of Nicaragua, home to a third of the country´s population, in less than 2 hours. The dust and noise dissolve into fields once again.



The shadows lengthen, fade and disappear. Only a faint glow remains above the western horizon. On the outskirts of Masaya, I stop and ask for directions.



There is a stable outside Bisma´s house. Two horses chewing straw. Dogs in the yard. Machinery lies everywhere. The truck that Bisma drove from Los Angeles to Nicaragua several years ago is parked beside two others, and outside the gate another pulls up. The working day comes to an end.

Cold beers appear from inside, and we sit outside on rocking chairs. Errands are ran; more cigarettes, more beer, and it is late before the cycle ends. We drive in Bisma´s car down to the town, and are welcomed into José´s house. As we step inside, Bisma turns to me, "This is Nicaragua."

Nicaragua then, is the thick rich scent of sizzling pork, and the sweet shiver of golden rum, the crispy salty taste of fried plantains, and a lightly spiced rice. It is a room full of people at midnight, music blaring from the street, and from inside. Children dropping bikes outside and running inside to drink juice, eat plantain crisps, and running out again to play. It is a great closeness between people, and an openness and generosity towards strangers. It is a beautiful, warm evening, at the end of a long hot day.

We are the last to leave, full and drunk; the streets are quiet, and the darkness cool.

"Come back tomorrow, stay for a few days," says José, showing us out.

I can´t, I tell him. I´m meeting my dad in Costa Rica. It´s a conversation we had only an hour or so ago.

"Ahh, Costa Rica. Tell your dad to come here. He would be very welcome."





Playa Hermosa, Nicoya Peninsular, Costa Rica

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